How I Found Livingstone Travels, Adventures And Discoveries In Central Africa Including Four Months Residence With Dr. Livingstone By Sir Henry M. Stanley
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Hamed Kimiani, As He Was Styled By The Arabs, Rushed Up To Sheikh
Thani, And Declared That He Must Take The Kiwyeh Road, Otherwise
His Pagazis Would All Desert.
Thani replied that all the roads
were the same to him, that wherever Hamed chose to go, he would
follow.
They then came to my tent, and informed me of the
determination at which the Wanyamwezi had arrived. Calling my
veteran Mnyamwezi, who had given me the favourable report once
more to my tent, I bade him give a correct account of the Kiti
road. It was so favourable that my reply to Hamed was, that I
was the master of my caravan, that it was to go wherever I told
the kirangozi, not where the pagazis chose; that when I told
them to halt they must halt, and when I commanded a march, a
march should be made; and that as I fed them well and did not
overwork them, I should like to see the pagazi or soldier that
disobeyed me. "You made up your mind just now that you would take
the Simbo road, and we were agreed upon it, now your pagazis say
they will take, the Kiwyeh road, or desert. Go on the Kiwyeh road
and pay twenty doti muhongo. I and my caravan to-morrow morning
will take the Kiti road, and when you find me in Unyanyembe
one day ahead of you, you will be sorry you did not take the same
road."
This resolution of mine had the effect of again changing the
current of Hamed's thoughts, for he instantly said, "That is the
best road after all, and as the Sahib is determined to go on it,
and we have all travelled together through the bad land of the
Wagogo, Inshallah!
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